40 -1 ." r w , but TRUE . fJfij-.y> fit,.. þ . . . N Q :. é. . ; _ : , ! . i'O 5 met i c , , A :': r can make \,/ "' ,\",v b e aut i'tt-' f 8<' r u I . . . except with the aid of Pre-Vue. the first mirror improvement in 4000 years. Pre-Vue has given the fair sex an instrument for their beautifi- cation and to bring out their love. liness under all hours of their lives. What help or good is the most expensive rouge, powder or lipstick to a lady's complexion if she has no means of judging accurately in advance how she will look under varying lights. Only Pre-Vue will reveal truthfully in advance how you will be seen under all lighting conditions. Use Pre-Vue to prevent ghastly make-up errors. the patented mirror, is available at the smartest shops everywhere. .A product of CENTA TRADING CORP. 353 FIFTH AVENUE. NEW YORK @ to speak, only the close-order drill of their profession. I registered, and followed the bellboy to the elevator, a nice-looking lad with shiny black hair, his pale-blue-and-gold uniform neatly fitted to his long legs and broad shoulders. In the elevator I asked him, while he stood properly at attention, whether the hotel was crowded, and was surprised to hear his answer ex- pressed in a fair imitation of an English accent. His face was not in the least English; it looked rather second- growth Italian. We left the elevator, and as he hurried ahead of me down the corridor and bent to the keyhole, I noticed that he had someone else's bag, not my own. "And get me a package of Luckies while you're down- stairs," I called after him as he dashed away, taking with him the bag and also the key to the room. I leaned against the wall and waited. In less than ten minutes he was back with my bag, panting a little, and full of apologies. "Dreadfully sorry, sir," he said. He bent over the keyhole again. The key went in, but wouldn't turn. He took it out and compared it with the number on the door. "Geez," I heard him mutter to himself, "if it ain't the wrong floor!" He straight- ened, clicked heels, and faced me. "Dreadfully sorry, sir, we're on the wrong floor. If you will follow me, please sir." He looked rattled. We took the elevator up one floor. Arrived inside the right room, stifling hot from the afternoon sun blazing through the closed windows, he did several things that astonished me. He turned on all the lights, pulled the shades up, shut one window which was open a crack, turned on the radio (an oily female voice bellowing of oily skin), and then, of all things, stooped and turned on the steam heat, whIch expressed its relief from confinement in a hissing roar. All in less time than it takes to tell, and with conscious pride in having carried out instructions to the letter. I spoiled it by asking for the cigar- ettes, and as he ran blushing from the : * @[I W rßjlír FRENCH VERMOUTH / --===.:., :-. ,-::::::: ::::= . ::. -:::=::: '::: :: :':;:;:";". '};fiiW", ." :" . ,.:,:.<::..".:. , .ø:.....:......'. '..:.:,':.:',... .. ......M....... ....... ::: . " .... .... '., k. d yOU must \t's the dry 'n d O cktai\s. f g OO c have or A PRESENTATION * Even at the Ritz Bar, her quiet entrance creates a strange restless- ness. W- omen lose interest in their cham.pagne cocktails. Men lose in..... terest in their wom.en. She 7 superbly chic is probably the only one who knows it's Millot's Crepe de Chine. \'.. ....''' " . ;'::"::/ . .:. ...:;:: ' . ' b,..."" . .... ....... ! ... '::':"'*' ! t. ;,< ." . , ..'::i'i: "";/' ::..> , '.'.. ., . ":..,. :: '-. . k:' ....::. '.: ; ::. ., . --.... " ":. .':i""'=.' {. ,,:. " .., ..... _w, , -dt f -C ' . C. f 1;; NE ;1;:.. ' A .. t . ) ), , * ,-, ..... -_ , ;: \':\ ----_ ' it .j@ . , . .:...'VOO '.: r.. ...:: :' . -.. . .. > . .,,,, \! ... ! :. . t. }iff; Ii :'It<<A:::::. . v:'ìf-è. , à x- -:' I :_ :.. g. t 1 ,:..::.; :., . : . f{ , : :::., . . . , : ' . : . : : : . :: , : , :.' : " :::::;:''1;::;:+:.::::,:,: Î: ' : : if ."'? .11i %iji .,: .,..., { Pßkfum ? L1 '* âk 0/ MiUOT. PARiS